Saman Translation On Other Language:

Saman (Sanskrit) [from the verbal root sam to be quiet, calm, resigned] A particular kind of sacred text or verse intended to be chanted; one of the four kinds of Vedic composition. Also the fifth of the eight Buddhist bhava-pushpas (flowers of being): tranquility, resignation. See also SAMA Sama, Saman (Sanskrit) [from the verbal root sam to be quiet, calm, resigned] Tranquility, calmness, equanimity, absence of passion, emancipation from all the illusions of existence; the fifth of the eight bhava-pushpas (flowers of being) of Buddhism: self-restraint, charity, impersonal affection, veracity, meditation, patience, resignation, and selfless devotion. Through the practice of the eight flowers, sama secures the conquest and final delivery from all kinds of mental and psychological agitation. Saman [from the verbal root Sam] has an almost identical meaning; also a particular kind of sacred text or verse intended to be chanted -- one of the four kinds of Vedic composition. See also SAMA-VEDA